BusinessMirror

I.O.C. REGULAR MEMBERSHIP DIPS TO BELOW 100 MARK

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THE number of full Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) members has slipped back below 100, following a string of mainly age-related departures taking effect at the end of the calendar year.

Among those departing are two rare voices of sensible, constructi­ve criticism during the first part of the Thomas Bach era—Richard Peterkin, from the Caribbean island of Saint Lucia, and Barry Maister, a diligent and much-respected New Zealander.

The IOC’s longtime representa­tives in South Africa—Sam Ramsamy—and North Korea—Chang Ung—have also ceased to be full members.

So have Malaysia’s Prince Tunku Imran, Larry Probst of the United States and Mario Pescante of Italy.

Italy’s contingent of full IOC members remains at three, however, with Giovanni Malagò, president of the Italian Olympic Committee, having this month joined sport’s most privileged club.

Malagò, 59, is as familiar a figure in Italy in luxury car circles as sporting ones. He is likely to be a key player in efforts by the MilanCorti­na d’Ampezzo bid to secure the right to host the 2026 Winter Olympics and Paralympic­s.

The net effect of these comings and goings is to reduce the number of full IOC members to 96.

One curiosity of the body’s present compositio­n is that only six of these members are listed as joining between 1999 and 2007—this is the same number as were elected in 1994 alone.

The explanatio­n lies in a switch in age limits, which has meant that those elected since 1999 retire broadly at 70 while those whose election pre-dates the change have been able to stay until 80.

The ranks of senior members are set to be thinned out at the end of this year, with five—Franco Carraro of Italy, Peru’s Iván Dibos, Willi Kaltschmit­t Luján of Guatemala, Sir Austin Sealy of Barbados and Syria’s Samih Moudallal—due to attain 80 during 2019.

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